Wednesday 31 January 2018

MK Oren Hazan calls Knesset Speaker Yuli Edelstein ‘Stalin’



Rabble-rouser MK Oren Hazan made incendiary comments in the plenary on Tuesday, calling Knesset Speaker Yuli Edelstein – a former refusenik – “Stalin,” shortly before Hazan began serving a six-month suspension from the Knesset for ethics violations.


Edelstein spent three years at hard labor in Siberian prison camps on fabricated drug charges, after he asked to be allowed to move to Israel and secretly conducted Hebrew classes in his home.



Hazan compared Edelstein to Joseph Stalin, the Soviet dictator responsible for the deaths of millions of people, because the Knesset speaker used a rule allowing him to eject a lawmaker who interrupts a special Knesset meeting after the first offense.


The Likud provocateur later apologized, calling his comment a “Freudian slip.”


After Hazan’s remark comparing the Knesset speaker to a murderous tyrant, MKs Bezalel Smotrich (Bayit Yehudi) and Hilik Bar (Zionist Union) organized a walkout of their colleagues during the rest of Hazan’s speech.


“Shame! Shame on this house,” Bar said.


Deputy Knesset Speaker Revital Swid, of the Zionist Union, who was running the plenum meeting, demanded that Hazan apologize, but he refused. Since Hazan was presenting a bill he proposed, he was allowed to have the stage.


“Edelstein is giving a prize to terrorists,” Hazan lamented from the Knesset’s podium. “How there be a reality in which I, who fights for IDF soldiers not to be called murderers [by Joint List MKs], am punished? How can it be that when I shut the mouth of [Joint List MK Jamal] Zahalka, who said two weeks ago that our flag is worse than a rag… I’m the one who’s punished?”




Article source: http://www.jpost.com/Israel-News/Court-releases-suspects-in-NIS-280m-land-fraud-scheme-in-West-Bank-513621

‘Don’t be scared of the truth’



“You shouldn’t be scared of the truth. It can turn from a weak point to a strength. It emphasizes dedication to democratic principles,” Haim Gouri said back in 1992, during a wide-ranging interview with The Jerusalem Post’s Liat Collins.


Then 69, Gouri expounded on how the Yom Kippur War marked a welcome turning point in how the Israeli media related to the stories they covered.



“In the 1950s and 1960s, journalists knew the truth about different matters like the Lavon Affair, but they preferred to keep quiet. They abided by the raison d’etat and were loyal to the policies of the government. After and even during the Yom Kippur War, this changed…


journalists stopped being keepers of secrets.”


Being responsible, Gouri said, means accurately reflecting the situation as it is, neither sensationalizing nor downplaying it.


“The Six Day War united the country territorially but divided it ideologically. People see this, just as a child knows when his parents argue. That is why getting accurate information is so important.


“A paper such as the Jerusalem Post, which also talks to the Diaspora, has to be particularly objective. It must reflect the shadow and the light, the arguments and the unity,” he said.


Regarding the complexion of the country, Gouri revealed what made him the beloved poet of Israel.


“We are a people of ups and downs, euphoria and pathos, pride and pique,” he said. “Everything about us is drastic… every day there is a sudden sunrise and an equally dramatic sunset, but there is no twilight.”




Article source: http://www.jpost.com/Israel-News/Court-releases-suspects-in-NIS-280m-land-fraud-scheme-in-West-Bank-513621

Greenblatt to EU envoys: Settlements are not the obstacle



Settlements are not the issue preventing an Israeli-Palestinian deal, US Mideast envoy Jason Greenblatt said in a conversation with EU ambassadors in Ramat Gan on Tuesday, adding that Israel has been very careful over the last year regarding settlement construction.


According to a participant in the meeting, Greenblatt said it is necessary to look at what construction has actually taken place, rather than at various announcements made about settlement construction in the media.



Greenblatt, according to one of the participants, said there is not that much actual building taking place; that where it is taking place is contiguous to existing settlements; and that Israel has taken a sensible approach on the matter.


Last March, Israel agreed to restrict its building beyond the Green Line to the built-up areas of existing settlements and, where that is not possible, to build close to the existing construction lines in an effort to reduce its settlement “footprint.”


This was the first meeting Greenblatt held here with EU ambassadors, who were also joined by the ambassadors from Canada, Australia, Norway and Switzerland.


Greenblatt was asked at the meeting about the contradiction between what US President Donald Trump said when announcing the recognition of Jerusalem as Israel’s capital – that this was not prejudging the final status of the city and that the borders would have to be worked out in negotiations – and his comment in Davos last week that the Jerusalem move had effectively taken the contentious issue “off the table.”


The US envoy’s response, according to participants in the meeting, was that it was Trump’s initial statement that accurately reflected US policy.


Although Greenblatt said it is not America’s responsibility to build a ladder on which the Palestinians could climb down from their stated position of ruling out any more US mediation, one of the participants in the discussion said Greenblatt gave the impression that he was intent on continuing to work with the Palestinians and figuring out a way to somehow move forward.


When asked – considering the Palestinian anger regarding the Jerusalem decision – if others could be drawn into the diplomatic efforts, he said the US continues to work on its diplomatic plan and that at some a point in the future there may be room for other actors to become involved.


ANOTHER PARTICIPANT in the meeting said the intention seems to be that after a framework plan is worked out, there will be parallel talks on issues such as water and security, and that in those talks several other states will be involved to provide various levels of assistance.


Greenblatt refused to give any timeline for when the US would present its plan or any of its details.


He said there is a good relation with the Quartet and some regional partners, saying that Jordan’s King Abdullah is realistic and wise, and that he had good meetings with the Egyptians.


Regarding the Saudis, Greenblatt, according to those who took part in meeting, said they were thirsting to resolve the conflict, and that they expressed their commitment to work to do so.


Some of what Greenblatt said privately to the ambassadors, he said in a closed meeting Monday night – the contents of which were made public on Wednesday – at the opening of the annual INSS conference in Tel Aviv.


Greenblatt said there that while Israeli-Palestinian peace may seem a daunting and even impossible task, after extensive travel in the region, “I continue to firmly believe that there is a real path toward peace.”


He said he feels this way despite the angry Palestinian rhetoric over the past few weeks.


“Despite criticism following President Trump’s recognition of Jerusalem as Israel’s capital, for the most part I have seen a growing receptivity to peace across the region,” he said.


Greenblatt said that Trump has brought a “fresh set of eyes and energy to the task of peacemaking,” and it is clear that his “actions and language have changed the expectation about what is possible. He has revitalized the discussion and language of peace in the region.”


Greenblatt acknowledged that Trump’s approach “reflects his unorthodox approach to the region,” but that it is “based on the belief that instead of working to impose a solution from the outside, we must give the parties space to make their own decisions about their future.”


Regarding the Jerusalem decision, Greenblatt said it did not prejudge any final-status issues.


“As we move forward, it is important that we not allow our efforts to be disrupted by false claims about the nature or purpose of our [Jerusalem] decision,” he said. “These distractions help no one, least of all the Palestinian people.”


He said that peace will not be achieved by denying thousands of years of Judaism’s connection to Jerusalem and the Land of Israel.


“Peace will not be achieved by walking away from negotiations. Peace only has a chance of success through a respectful, continuous dialogue and through continuous negotiation,” Greenblatt said.




Article source: http://www.jpost.com/Israel-News/Court-releases-suspects-in-NIS-280m-land-fraud-scheme-in-West-Bank-513621

U.S. allows Syrians to stay for another 18 months



WASHINGTON – The Trump administration said on Wednesday it would allow some 7,000 Syrians to remain in the United States for at least another 18 months under protected status as civil war rages in their native country.


The decision was a relief for the Syrians who would have faced the prospect of returning to a fractured country racked with violence if the administration had rescinded their temporary protected status (TPS) when it ran out in March.


Instead, they are allowed to stay through September 30, 2019.


“After carefully considering conditions on the ground, I have determined that it is necessary to extend the Temporary Protected Status designation for Syria,” said Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen in a statement.


“It is clear that the conditions upon which Syria’s designation was based continue to exist, therefore an extension is warranted under the statute,” she added.


The administration stopped short of re-designating Syria’s status, which means that it will continue to benefit only Syrians who have been in the United States since 2016 or earlier.


“It fell short that they didn’t re-designate it but I think it’s a positive action nonetheless that should be praised,” said Monzer Shakally, 21, a Syrian student at the University of Iowa with the temporary status. “I’m happy this decision came out now and I don’t have to worry about this for another 18 months at least.”




Article source: http://www.jpost.com/Israel-News/Court-releases-suspects-in-NIS-280m-land-fraud-scheme-in-West-Bank-513621

Haley blasts UN 'blacklist' as 'anti-Israel obsession'



Nikki Haley, United States ambassador to the United Nations, blasted the reported “blacklist” being created in the UN of companies that do business in the West Bank in a statement released on Wednesday night, calling it the, “latest anti-Israel actions taken by the Human Rights Council.”


“This whole issue is outside the bounds of the High Commissioner for Human Rights office’s mandate and is a waste of time and resources,” said Haley. “While we note that they wisely refrained from listing individual companies, the fact that the report was issued at all is yet another reminder of the Council’s anti-Israel obsession. The more the Human Rights Council does this, the less effective it becomes as an advocate against the world’s human rights abusers. The United States will continue to aggressively push back against the anti-Israel bias, and advance badly needed reforms of the Council.”


The US plans to stay in the United Nations Human Rights Council after publication of the list was delayed.




Article source: http://www.jpost.com/Israel-News/Court-releases-suspects-in-NIS-280m-land-fraud-scheme-in-West-Bank-513621

Israel rejects UN 'blacklist' of businesses linked to settlements as 'fundamentally illegitimate'


Israel has rejected a UN report released on Wednesday which says it has identified 206 companies doing business linked to unlawful Israeli settlements in the West Bank and urged them to avoid any complicity in “pervasive” violations against Palestinians.


Israel fears that companies listed on any UN “blacklist” could be targeted for boycotts or divestment aimed at stepping up pressure over its settlements, which most countries and the world body view as illegal. 
“Businesses play a central role in furthering the establishment, maintenance and expansion of Israeli settlements,” the report, published by the UN’s human rights office, said.


“In doing so, they are contributing to Israel’s confiscation of land, facilitate the transfer of its population into the Occupied Palestinian Territory and are involved in the exploitation of Palestine’s natural resources,” it said.


The majority of the companies, or 143, are domiciled in Israel or the settlements, followed by 22 in the United States, it said. The remainder are based in 19 other countries, including Germany, the Netherlands, France and Britain.


The UN report did not name the companies and said that its database was not yet complete.



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Israel’s ambassador, Aviva Raz Shechter, said her government was still studying the report, launched by a resolution of the UN Human Rights Council in March 2016, but rejected the concept as “fundamentally illegitimate”.
“It is outside the competence and the authority of the Human Rights Council to deal with blacklisting. … This is part of the bias to try to delegitimise Israel,” Raz Shechter told Reuters.


Israel did not want to see the UN human rights office at the “forefront of a BDS (Boycott, Divestment, Sanction)” movement, she said.
Raz Shechter declined to discuss any of the Israeli companies or say whether some were state-owned, adding: “Companies are not engaged in any unlawful activities.”


Israel’s main ally, the United States, says the 47-member Human Rights Council is stacked with opponents of Israel. U.S. Ambassador Nikki Haley told the Council last June that it was reviewing its participation given the forum’s “chronic anti-Israel bias”.
Haley said in a statement on Wednesday that while the report “wisely refrained from listing individual companies, the fact that the report was issued at all is yet another reminder of the Council’s anti-Israel obsession.”


‘Corporate responsibility’
The report said that the work in producing the UN database “does not purport to constitute a judicial process of any kind”.
But businesses operating in the occupied territories have a corporate responsibility to carry out due diligence and consider “whether it is possible to engage in such an environment in a manner that respects human rights”, it said.


The office’s mandate was to identify businesses involved in the construction of settlements, surveillance, services including transport, and banking and financial operations such as loans for housing.
Violations associated with the settlements are “pervasive and devastating, reaching every facet of Palestinian life,” the report said. It cited restrictions on freedom of religion, movement and education and lack of access to land, water and jobs.


The report is to be debated at the UN Human Rights Council session of Feb. 26 to March 23.


Article source: http://www.jpost.com/Israel-News/Court-releases-suspects-in-NIS-280m-land-fraud-scheme-in-West-Bank-513621

Despite promise to Israel, Polish Senate passes bill criminalizing mention of Polish nation's participation in the Holocaust


The upper house of the Polish parliament, the Senate, has approved the controversial bill criminalizing allegations of Polish complicity in the Holocaust. The bill has caused a storm of opposition in Israel.


“We have to send a clear signal to the world that we won’t allow for Poland to continue being insulted,” Patryk Jaki, a deputy justice minister, told reporters in parliament.


The Senate voted on the draft bill in the early hours on Thursday and it will now be sent to President Andrzej Duda for a final signature. 
Poland’s PAP news agency reported 57 senators voted for the draft bill, with 23 against and two abstentions.


The Senate’s approval of the bill came despite Polish assurances that a dialogue on the legislation would be held with Israel before a vote on it in the Senate. It had previously been approved by the lower house of parliament.


The legislation, which still requires the approval by Poland’s president to become law, bans any claims that the Polish people or Polish state were responsible or complicit in the Nazis’ crimes, crimes against humanity or war crimes. The bill also bans minimizing the responsibility of “the real perpetrators” for these crimes.



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In explanatory notes accompanying the bill, it was noted that it aims to fight expressions such as “Polish extermination camps,” which purportedly attribute guilt for the Nazis’ crimes to the Poles — rather than reference Nazi concentration camps in Poland. The bill calls for an imprisonment of up to three years for violations of the legislation.


 The Polish were once victims of historical whitewashing. Now they are doing the same


The lower house of parliament passed the bill last Friday. Media reports of the lower house’s passage of the bill created political, public and media storm in Israel. Israelis officials took several steps in response, including a telephone call between Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his Polish counterpart, Mateusz Morawiecki. The Polish deputy ambassador in Israel was summoned to the Israeli Foreign Ministry for clarifications, and Israel’s ambassador in Warsaw had contacts on the matter with the Polish president’s office.


The contacts resulted in the two countries agreeing to set up a joint taskforce to discuss the matter, but even before the sides began their work, the Polish Senate approved the bill. The last stage of the Polish legislative process is its approval by Polish President Andrzej Duda, who has the power to request changes to the legislation or even veto it. In recent comments, however, Duda has expressed support for the legislation, which he said corrects a historic wrong and defends Poland’s reputation.


The legislation carves out an exception for “artistic and scientific” activity. The Polish Foreign Ministry has said that law would also not limit the freedom to conduct research or to hold historical debate. The president’s chief of staff, Krzysztof said the purpose of the law was “preventing lies and baseless accusations directed at the Polish people and the Polish state.” For its part, the Polish Foreign Ministry said it was meant “to prevent the deliberate defamation of Poland.”


Earlier the president’s office attempted to calm concerns in Israel, stating: “Anyone who has a true personal memory or historical research on crimes and on improper conduct that took place in the past with the participation of Poles has the full right to verify this.”


The United States asked Poland to rethink plans to enact proposed legislation, arguing Wednesday that if it passes it could hurt freedom of speech as well as strategic relationships.
U.S. State Department spokeswoman Neather Nauert voiced her government’s concerns, saying that the U.S. understands that phrases like “Polish death camps” are “inaccurate, misleading, and hurtful” but voiced concern the legislation could “undermine free speech and academic discourse.”


“We are also concerned about the repercussions this draft legislation, if enacted, could have on Poland’s strategic interests and relationships — including with the United States and Israel. The resulting divisions that may arise among our allies benefit only our rivals,” Nauert said.
“We encourage Poland to reevaluate the legislation in light of its potential impact on the principle of free speech and on our ability to be effective partners.”


Nauert’s statement came only days after U.S. Secretary of State Rex Tillerson visited Warsaw, where he paid respects to Jewish and Polish victims of the war on International Holocaust Remembrance Day.


Earlier Wednesday, a U.S. congressional task force on combatting anti-Semitism said it was “alarmed” by the legislation and called on Polish President Andrzej Duda to veto it.
“We are deeply concerned that this legislation could have a chilling effect on dialogue, scholarship, and accountability in Poland about the Holocaust, should this legislation become law,” the bipartisan group said.


The lower house of the Polish parliament approved the bill on Friday, a day before International Holocaust Remembrance Day, timing that has also been criticized as insensitive.


Reuters contributed to this report.


Article source: http://www.jpost.com/Israel-News/Court-releases-suspects-in-NIS-280m-land-fraud-scheme-in-West-Bank-513621

Israel, Lebanon argue over disputed offshore energy block



TEL AVIV/BEIRUT – Israel described as “very provocative” on Wednesday a Lebanese offshore oil and gas exploration tender in disputed territory on the countries’ maritime border, and urged international firms not to bid.


Lebanese President Michel Aoun, whose country considers Israel an enemy state, described the comments as “a threat to Lebanon”.



“When they issue a tender on a gas field, including Block 9, which by any standard is ours … this is very, very challenging and provocative conduct here,” Israeli Defense Minister Avigdor Liberman said.


“Respectable firms” bidding on the tender “are, to my mind, making a grave error – because this is contrary to all of the rules and all protocol in cases like this,” he told an international security conference hosted by Tel Aviv University’s INSS think-tank.


Lebanon in December approved a bid by a consortium of France’s Total, Italy’s Eni and Russia’s Novatek for two of the five blocks put up for tender in the country’s much-delayed first oil and gas offshore licensing round.


One of the awarded blocks, Block 9, borders Israeli waters. Lebanon has an unresolved maritime border dispute with Israel over a triangular area of sea of around 860 sq km (330 square miles) that extends along the edge of three of the blocks.


“Liberman’s words about Block 9 are a threat to Lebanon and its right to sovereignty over its territorial waters,” Aoun said on his official Twitter account.


Lebanese Prime Minister Saad al-Hariri said the country would take up the comments with the “relevant international bodies to affirm its right to act in its territorial waters”.


“For the past few days Israeli officials have been deliberately sending threatening messages to Lebanon,” Hariri said in a statement from his press office.


Hariri said Lieberman’s words were “blatant provocation”.


The contracts are expected to be officially signed on Feb. 9, the Lebanese Petroleum Administration said, allowing exploration to begin.


The licensing round was relaunched in January last year after a three-year delay caused by political paralysis.


Lebanon is on the Levant Basin in the eastern Mediterranean where a number of big sub-sea gas fields have been discovered since 2009, including the Leviathan and Tamar fields located in Israeli waters near the disputed marine border with Lebanon.


Israel last went to war in Lebanon in 2006, against the Iran-backed Hezbollah militia. With tensions rising anew, Liberman said Lebanon would “pay in full” for any new Hezbollah attacks on Israel.


But he said Israel sought no war, adding: “We try to conduct ourselves determinedly and responsibly.”




Article source: https://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/.premium-1.834433

U.S. to stay in UNHRC as 'black list' publication delayed



The US said it planned to remain in the UN Human Rights Council after publication of a black a of companies doing business in the areas of Israel over the pre-1967 lines was delayed.


The Trump Administration had previously threatened to leave the UNHRC unless it halted its biased treatment against Israel, including the publication of the database.



“The US remains a member of the Human Rights Council and intends to be fully engaged at the upcoming March session,” a US official told The Jerusalem Post on Wednesday.


The Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights had been scheduled to release a database of those companies by the end of 2017 to fulfill a mandate the UN Human Rights Council first set in 2016.


But it did not meet that December deadline and in a progress report published Wednesday, it stated: “OHCHR was given limited resources to carry out the mandate within the anticipated time frame, which required it to calibrate its research and engagement with companies accordingly.”


“Not all companies about which OHCHR had received information could be contacted by the time of submission of the present report,” the office wrote.


It explained that it had whittled its initial list of 321 companies believed to meet the criteria for inclusion in the database down to 206. Out of those, it had contacted only 64.


The report did not provide the names of any of those companies in its report.


“More resources are required for OHCHR to continue its dialogue with and issue communications to relevant business enterprises, adding information to the database and updating existing information in the database,” it said. “Once OHCHR has been in contact with all 206 companies, and subject to determinations of their responses and non-responses, OHCHR expects to provide the names of the companies engaged in listed activities in a future update.”


“Before the determinations on the companies are made public, OHCHR will notify the companies concerned,” the report said.


“For the high commissioner to update the database as required by resolution 31/36, more resources are required,” it said.


It plans to present its report at the Human Rights Council’s 37th session to be held in Geneva from February 26 to March 23.


The Trump administration and Israel have worked behind the scenes to thwart publication of the list, which is seen as a step toward criminalizing economic activity with those regions, including West Bank settlements and their industrial zones that hire both Israeli and Palestinian workers.


Ambassador to the UN Danny Danon, in New York, immediately attacked the High Commissioner’s Office for publishing the report on the same day as it held a ceremony at its Manhattan headquarters in memory of the Holocaust.


“On the day that the UN is marking International Holocaust Remembrance Day, the UNHRC has chosen to publicize this information about the number of companies operating in Israel,” Danon said.


“This is a shameful act which will serve as a stain on the UNHRC forever. We will continue to act with our allies and use all the means at our disposal to stop the publication of this disgraceful blacklist,” Danon said.


The data published in the report showed that 143 of the firms doing business in West Bank settlements, east Jerusalem and the Golan Heights were Israeli. The remaining 63 companies were foreign, of which the largest group, 22, was from the US.

It reiterated its stance that such activity was illegal under international law.


“Businesses play a central role in furthering the establishment, maintenance and expansion of Israeli settlements,” the report stated.

“It is difficult to imagine a scenario in which a company could engage in listed activities in a way that is consistent with the Guiding Principles and international law.”


It also dismissed Israel’s contention that Palestinians benefited from the activities of such firms in the West Bank and east Jerusalem because it offered them higher paid jobs and thus helped the Palestinian economy.


The report charged that the activities of these firms were harmful to the Palestinian economy.


UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Zeid Ra’ad Al-Hussein said, “I am satisfied, given the resource constraints and the unprecedented nature of such a request from the UN Human Rights Council, that significant progress has been made.”











Article source: https://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/.premium-1.834433

Bennett to double number of students studying agriculture



In time for Wednesday’s celebration of Tu Bishvat, the “New Year of the Trees,” the Education Ministry announced a NIS 1.7 million program that aims to double the number of students taking part in agricultural education.


“In honor of Tu Bishvat, a holiday of patriotism and connection to the land, we are increasing the number of farms and renovating the existing ones that thousands of other students will enjoy a profound educational and agricultural experience,” said Education Minister Naftali Bennett. “As I have mentioned in the past, tests are important but values and heritage are key to the education of our children.”



“Planting seeds and cultivating soil are educational activities that grow both the seedlings and the pupils. Together we will make this country bloom,” he said.


The five-year plan aims to increase the number of farms participating in agricultural education and double the number of students studying on farms.


Some 45 farms throughout the country currently participate, 19 of which are located in the North and in Haifa.


The farms are connected to officially recognized schools. They serve as a “center of knowledge and experience” in agricultural and environmental sciences, the Education Ministry explained, and are subject to ongoing supervision by the ministry.


During the current academic year, some 47,000 elementary-school students are expected to study and receive an agricultural education on one of these farms.


As part of the agricultural program, pupils learn about agriculture, eco-preservation, farming, growing food and recycling. They also get hands-on experience planting seedlings, caring for plants and picking fruits and vegetables.


Shmuel Abuav, the ministry’s director-general, said the curriculum allows for pupils to enjoy an “enriching and meaningful agricultural experience.”


“We will expand the number of farms throughout the country and for all sectors so that on Tu Bishvat in five years we will allow 85,000 pupils to experience agriculture,” he said.


As such, the ministry intends to renovate existing farms and build additional ones.


Implementation of the plan will take place gradually, the ministry said, so that in five years’ time there will be 54 farms providing educational agricultural experiences to students throughout the country.




Article source: https://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/.premium-1.834433

Reuven Wabashat becomes chief rabbi of Ethiopian community



Rabbi Reuven Wabashat has been appointed as chief rabbi of the Ethiopian community, taking over from Rabbi Yosef Hadane who stepped down in 2017.


Wabashat, 47, was born in Ethiopia and immigrated to Israel with his family when he was two years old.



He was a combat soldier in the Golani infantry brigade, and subsequently became an officer and served as a military rabbi.


Following his release from the army, Wabashat studied in yeshiva under the tutelage of Rabbi Yoram Abergil, and began involving himself in education and teaching, especially within the Ethiopian community, receiving his rabbinic ordination from the late Rabbi Ovadia Yosef and Rabbi Yaakov Ariel, then chief rabbi of Ramat Gan.


Hadane welcomed Wabashat’s appointment this week, describing him as a Torah scholar who has carried out his work as a rabbi faithfully over the last two decades.


Religious Services Ministry director-general Oded Flus said that Wabashat’s appointment would contribute greatly to the standing of the rabbinate among the Ethiopian community, and that his “rich experience” would stand him in good stead in his new position.


Hadane himself left under something of a cloud, after a request he made to have his tenure extended after he reached the age of retirement at 67 in 2016.


At the time, allegations were made that the decision not to extend his tenure was due to Hadane’s opposition to discriminatory practices against Ethiopians when registering for marriage.


Members of the Ethiopian community have complained on several occasions in the last three years, particularly regarding the Petah Tikva Rabbinate, that they have been unable to register for marriage, because several local rabbinates have refused to accept their conversions through the State Conversion Authority.


Although Ethiopian immigrants from the Beta Israel community are recognized as fully Jewish and do not need to undergo conversion, immigrants belonging to the Falash Mura community, which converted in the 19th century from Judaism to Christianity, are required to undergo a streamlined conversion process by the state after immigrating.


Such extensions as requested by Hadane are routinely given to municipal chief rabbis, including those of an advanced age, but Hadane’s request was denied because, the Religious Services Ministry said, his post was a position within the civil service, and different from municipal chief rabbis.


Eventually the ministry allowed Hadane to continue serving for another six months, but insisted on ultimately replacing him.




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OurCrowd raises $650m., Arab investors show increased interest



Israel-based OurCrowd, one of the world’s largest crowdfunding platforms, announced that it has raised $650 million for some 145 start-ups and in 12 funds since its launch in 2013.


Coming a day before its annual conference on Thursday – for which 10,000 attendees are traveling to Jerusalem from more than 90 countries – OurCrowd CEO Jonathan Medved told journalists that investors were making inquiries from unlikely places, including from neighboring countries in the Middle East.



“There is increased interest from Arab investors, but they’re not ready to publicly talk about it,” Medved said. “I think next year, there will be a number of hands raised from the Arab world…. It’s not long before those funds reach here.”


Given geopolitical changes – a convergence of Israeli and Sunni Gulf Arab interests as they oppose Iranian influence – Arab investors have started to probe the Israeli crowdfunding platform, Medved said, adding that in 2018 and 2019, such commercial ties could bloom.


Medved added that the SoftBank Vision fund – a $100 billion fund which has invested in a number of Israeli start-ups – gets much of its capital from sovereign wealth funds in the Arab world.


It’s another sign of booming ties and greater opportunities for the Jewish state, as the dollar amounts for Israeli exits have more than tripled since 2013.


“I’ve been a cheerleader for Start-Up Nation since before the book was written,” Medved said on Wednesday, before hyping the conference.


“It’ll be like Las Vegas meets Jerusalem; there’ll be a lot of show business, a lot of serious investment and a lot of people.”


OurCrowd, an equity platform that allows crowdfunding from accredited investors, said that it is expected to hold more than $1b. in assets under management in 2018.


Also on Wednesday, OurCrowd announced the launch of its Labs/02 seed-stage incubator, meant to invest in up to 100 early-stage start-ups over the next decade.


The fund comes on the heels of a sharp drop in funding deals for early-stage start-ups – with incubator seed deals dropping by 49% in 2017.


Located in Jerusalem, the new fund will be supported by the Israel Innovation Authority, formerly known as the Chief Scientist’s Office in the Economy Ministry. It will focus on technologies such as AI, deep learning and autonomous driving.


Initial investments include the start-up Keepers, a child-safety mobile app that equips parents with tools to help their children cope with social media addiction.


“At Keepers, we are focused on keeping our kids safe online, and the Labs/02 team of professional leaders can help us execute fast in this very timely market,” said Keepers CEO Hanan Lipskin in a statement.




Article source: https://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/.premium-1.834433

Russia says hundreds killed in Turkish operation in Syria's Afrin



MOSCOW – Several hundred people, including civilians, have been killed during Turkey’s military operation in Syria’s Afrin, Interfax news agency cited Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova as saying on Wednesday.




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More than 200 companies have Israeli settlement ties


GENEVA – The United Nations human rights office said on Wednesday it had identified 206 companies so far doing business linked to Israeli settlements in the West Bank, where it said violations against Palestinians are “pervasive and devastating.”


The report is politically sensitive because companies in the U.N. database could be targeted for boycotts or divestment aimed at stepping up pressure on Israel over its settlements, which most countries and the world body view as illegal.


“The majority of these companies are domiciled in Israel or the settlements (143), with the second largest group located in the United States (22). The remainder are domiciled in 19 other countries,” the U.N. human rights office said in a statement.




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Egyptian court sentences 16 over Church raid


CAIRO – An Egyptian court on Wednesday gave 15 people one-year suspended jail sentences over a December attack on an unlicensed Coptic Church in a village south of Cairo, judicial sources said.


The perpetrators were each fined 500 Egyptian pounds ($28) on charges of inciting sectarian strife, harming national unity and vandalizing private property. They can appeal.


The Giza misdemeanor court also fined the owner of the building, a Christian man, 360,000 Egyptian pounds ($20,500) for turning his residency into a church without a license.


Dozens of Muslims from the village of Kafr al-Waslin attacked the church after Friday prayers on Dec. 22, smashing windows and breaking everything inside.


The Archdiocese of Atfih had applied to legalize the church, which housed worshippers for 15 years after a church building law was passed in 2016.


Christians in Egypt have long complained of discrimination in the majority-Muslim country and have increasingly come under attack in recent years.


Egyptian authorities are also battling a stubborn Islamist insurgency, mostly concentrated in the remote Sinai Peninsula, which has claimed several attacks on Egypt’s large Christian minority.




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Egypt's Sisi warns opponents as calls to boycott election build



CAIRO – Egypt’s President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi delivered a stern warning on Wednesday to anyone looking to challenge his rule, a day after opposition leaders called for a boycott of the March 26-28 presidential election.


“Be warned. What happened seven or eight years ago, will not happen again in Egypt,” Sisi said, a reference to mass protests in 2011 that unseated long-term ruler Hosni Mubarak and ushered in years of political and economic turbulence.


“What didn’t work then, will not work now. No … it looks like you don’t know me well,” he said at the inauguration of the north African country’s mammoth Zohr gas field.


More than 150 politicians and activists called on Tuesday for voters to boycott the March election in which Sisi and a supporter-turned-challenger are the only contenders after a string of other candidates withdrew citing repression.


Those calling for a boycott included lawyer Hamdeen Sabahy, who ran against Sisi in 2014’s presidential election, and Hesham Genena, the former head of Egypt’s anti-corruption watchdog who had been campaigning for ex-military chief of staff Sami Anan.


Anan was arrested on Jan. 23 and halted his presidential bid after the army accused him of breaking the law by running for office without permission.


Sisi said he could ask Egyptians to take to the streets and give him a “mandate” in the face of what he described as “villains”. He did not specify who or what he meant.


“Listen, whoever wants to mess with Egypt and ruin it, has to do away with me first,” said Sisi, who was elected in 2014, a year after he led the army to overthrow Islamist President Mohamed Mursi.




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Anti-Jewish sentiment 'becoming more common in Britain,' group says



LONDON – Anti-Jewish sentiment is generally becoming more commonplace in Britain, a charity that provides security advice to the country’s Jewish communities said on Thursday.


The Community Security Trust (CST) said better recording and publicity around alleged anti-Jewish sentiment in the opposition Labour Party was partly to blame for a record number of antisemitic incidents in Britain last year but also warned it reflected a general rise in anti-Semitism.


“Hatred is rising and Jewish people are suffering as a result,” said David Delew, chief executive of the CST, which helps protect Britain’s estimated 270,000 Jews.


“It appears that the factors that led to a general, sustained high level of antisemitic incidents in 2016 have continued throughout much of 2017.”


There were 1,382 antisemitic incidents nationwide in 2017, a three percent increase from the year before which had been the previous highest annual number recorded by the CST since it began its monitoring program in 1984.


There was a 34 percent rise in the number of violent antisemitic assaults to 145 but most incidents related to verbal abuse of Jews in public who were identifiable from their religious clothing, school uniform or jewelry.




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Israeli Lorde fans sue foreign BDS activists for ‘inciting’ her to cancel show


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Israel presents $1 billion rehab plan for Palestinians, but demands the Palestinian Authority take over Gaza


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Polish Senate debates controversial Holocaust bill


The upper house of the Polish parliament, the Senate, has started debating the bill criminalizing allegations of Polish complicity in the Holocaust. The bill has caused a storm of opposition in Israel.


The Senate’s debate over the bill comes despite Polish assurances that a dialogue on the legislation would be held with Israel before a vote on it in the Senate. It had previously been approved by the lower house of parliament.


The legislation, which still requires the approval of the Senate as well as Poland’s president to become law, ban claims that the Polish people or Polish state were responsible or complicit in the Nazis’ crimes, crimes against humanity or war crimes. The bill also bans minimizing the responsibility of “the real perpetrators” for these crimes.


Senate speaker Stanislaw Karczewski said he expected the upper house to vote late Wednesday, putting the controversial bill a step closer to becoming law. It must still be signed into law by the president, who supports it.


Poland’s conservative ruling Law and Justice party authored the bill, which foresees up to three years of prison for any intentional attempt to falsely attribute the crimes of Nazi Germany to the Polish state or people.



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Law and Justice says it is fighting against phrases like “Polish death camps” to refer to death camps operated by Nazi Germany in occupied Poland during World War II.


Israel, however, sees the move an attempt to whitewash the role some Poles played in the killing of Jews during World War II.


The dispute, which erupted over the weekend, has elicited bitter recriminations on both sides. Some Israelis have accused the mostly Catholic Poles of being driven by anti-Semitism and of trying to deny the Holocaust. Poles believe that they are being defamed by being linked to German crimes of which they were one of the largest group of victims.
Amid the dispute some Polish commentators, including in government-controlled media, have made strong anti-Jewish remarks.


The United States asked Poland to rethink plans to enact proposed legislation, arguing Wednesday that if it passes it could hurt freedom of speech as well as strategic relationships.
U.S. State Department spokeswoman Neather Nauert voiced her government’s concerns, saying that the U.S. understands that phrases like “Polish death camps” are “inaccurate, misleading, and hurtful” but voiced concern the legislation could “undermine free speech and academic discourse.”


“We are also concerned about the repercussions this draft legislation, if enacted, could have on Poland’s strategic interests and relationships — including with the United States and Israel. The resulting divisions that may arise among our allies benefit only our rivals,” Nauert said.
“We encourage Poland to reevaluate the legislation in light of its potential impact on the principle of free speech and on our ability to be effective partners.”


Nauert’s statement came only days after U.S. Secretary of State Rex Tillerson visited Warsaw, where he paid respects to Jewish and Polish victims of the war on International Holocaust Remembrance Day.


Earlier Wednesday, a U.S. congressional task force on combatting anti-Semitism said it was “alarmed” by the legislation and called on Polish President Andrzej Duda to veto it.
“We are deeply concerned that this legislation could have a chilling effect on dialogue, scholarship, and accountability in Poland about the Holocaust, should this legislation become law,” the bipartisan group said.


The lower house of the Polish parliament approved the bill on Friday, a day before International Holocaust Remembrance Day, timing that has also been criticized as insensitive.


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Israeli lawmaker Oren Hazan temporarily removed from Knesset over 'offensive statements'


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Haim Gouri, shaper of Israel's national memory


The work of Haim Gouri, who died at 94 Wednesday, shaped Israel’s national memory to a great degree. It’s hard to imagine a memorial service for Israeli soldiers without the singing of “Shir Hare’ut” (“song of friendship”) or “Bab el Wad,” or the commemoration of the Holocaust without Gouri’s documentaries “The 81st Blow” and “The Last Sea.” Gouri was the last representative of the “1948 generation” of Hebrew literature, the cultural elder statesman whose biography reads like a summary of Israeli history: the son of Third Aliyah pioneers who helped found the Palmah and to bring Holocaust survivors from Europe and served as an officer in every Israeli war from the War of Independence to the Yom Kippur War.


But Gouri was not just a poet, author, journalist and filmmaker; he was also a public figure who expressed opinions on the heart of the national dispute. His father was a founder of Labor Party forerunner Mapai and one of its leading activists during the Ben-Gurion era. For years he chaired the Knesset Finance Committee. The son, however, veered rightward, joining Ahdut Ha’avoda, which opposed dividing the land into Jewish and Arab states.


After the Six-Day War, which achieved with the army’s weapons the Ahdut Ha’avoda vision of annexation, Gouri was one of the founders of the Movement for Greater Israel. The peak of his influence was in late 1974, when he mediated between the Gush Emunim settlers and the Rabin government, which allowed them to remain on the hilltop in Samaria where they established the illegal settlement of Sebastia. That was the start of the settlement enterprise of religious Zionism, aimed at precluding any partition agreement. Gouri lent it the legitimacy of the old guard, while at the same time opposing infringement of the human rights of the Palestinians in the territories.


In recent years Gouri criticized the direction Israel took, particularly religious extremism, ultra-Orthodox separatism and rejection of the principles of equality expressed in the Declaration of Independence.
His last appearance was in a successful campaign by Palmah veterans against the commemoration of Rehavam Ze’evi, the man of transfer and alleged rape, at the Sha’ar Hagai historic site. But even in his later disillusionment, and despite his recognition of the many injustices causes by the prolonged control of the territories, Gouri refused to view Israel as an occupying power, clinging to the saying, “The Jewish people is not an occupier in the Land of Israel.”


Gouri’s tragedy, like those of many of his generation, was the effort to straddle the fence, to shoot while crying, to be both moral and an occupier. Gouri called it “the third way.” He belatedly realized that the settlers and right-wing governments were leading the state into moral disaster and undermining the democracy the founders established. But he didn’t succeed, or didn’t dare, to offer an alternative and to fight for it. The 1948 generation left that mission to its heirs.



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The above article is Haaretz’s lead editorial, as published in the Hebrew and English newspapers in Israel.


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US classifies Hamas chief Haniyeh as specially designated global terrorist



The United States government has designated Hamas Politburo Chief Ismail Haniyeh as a specially designated global terrorist, becoming the first country outside of Israel to do so, Ambassador Nathan A. Sales, the Coordinator for Counterterrorism told The Jerusalem Post.


“Ismail Haniyeh has been involved in Hamas’ campaign of terrorism against Israel for years and even decades. The United States is not fooled by any attempt by Hamas to rebrand itself. We know it for what it is, a terror organization committed to the destruction of the State of Israel.”



Following the recognition of Jerusalem as Israel’s capital by US President Donald Trump on December 6, Haniyeh called for a violent uprising in response to the move that he vowed would continue until “Jerusalem’s liberation.”


According to Sales, the consequences of this designation under executive order 13224 which aims to impede terrorist funding, is “significant.”


“All assets belonging to Haniyeh under US jurisdiction will be frozen,” Sales told The Post.“This designation allows us to dry up the sources of funding and kick them out of the international financial system.  We don’t want to only stop the bomber, but the person who buys the bombs.”


Israeli officials have accused Iran of growing involvement in funding terror groups such as Hamas to carry out attacks against the Jewish State, with IDF Chief of Staff stating that the Islamic Republic had increased its funding to Hamas and Palestinian Islamic Jihad to the tune of $100 million in order to have more influence in the Gaza Strip.


According to Sales, while the increased ties between Hamas and Iran do play a role in the designation, the Trump’s administration’s top priority is to defeat terrorism “in all its forms” that threaten the United States and its allies.


“Israel is of course one of our closest allies, especially when it comes to counter terrorism. We have a strong interest in ensuring the continued security of Israel and so groups like Hamas and Hezbollah which threaten Israel on a daily basis, we will do what we can to put pressure to bear on those groups.”


While the United States is the first country outside Israel to designate Haniyeh, other Hamas members such as Yahya Sinwar and Muhammed Deif  were designated in September 2015.


In addition to Haniyeh’s designation, the United States will also be designating Harkaat al-Sabareen, an Iranian-backed terror group in the Gaza Strip which broke from Islamic Jihad in May 2014.


“This group has launched rockets into Israel from the Gaza Strip and has also planned deadly terror attacks,” Sales said, adding that the group is part of Iran’s network of terror organizations which it uses to spread its influence around the world.


“By designating this group we are signaling very clearly that Iran’s consistent support for terrorism is incompatible with the values of a civilized society and must stop.”


Two Egyptian terror groups will also be designated by the US government as Foreign Terror Organizations, Liwa al-Thura and Hazm, both offshoots of the Muslim Brotherhood movement.


“These groups, in their relatively short history have compiled a truly bloody record of killing senior Egyptian government and military officials as well as innocent civilians. A stable Egypt is in the interest of the United States and in the interest of Israel, and this is why we are pursuing these two designations.”




Article source: http://www.jpost.com/Israel-News/New-revelations-in-sexual-harassment-case-of-Netanyahus-ex-chief-of-staff-519622